Recent Trends and Findings Regarding the Magnitude and Prevention of College Drinking and Drug Use Problems Ralph Hingson, Sc.D., M.P.H. Director, Division of Epidemiology and Prevention Research National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism SAMHSA: Making the Grade on College Drinking Prevention Webcast of a national 2012 Town Hall Meeting on Underage Drinking Prevention National Harbor, MD Feb. 6, 2012
Magnitude of Alcohol Problems on U.S. College Campuses Dr. Margaret Moore Jonathan Levy Travis Stedman Hingson et al. (2002) J. Studies on Alcohol
Interventions National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Individually oriented Family School Web-Based Environmental Comprehensive Community Interventions
Gentilello Brief Motivational Alcohol Intervention in a Trauma Center; Annals of Surgery, 1999 46% of injured trauma center patients age 18 and older screened positive for alcohol problems. Half (N=336) randomly allocated to receive 30 minute brief intervention to reduce risky drinking and offers links to alcohol treatment
Gentilello Brief Motivational Alcohol Intervention in a Trauma Center; Annals of Surgery, 1999 Reduced alcohol consumption by an average 21 drinks per week at 1 year follow up 47% reduction in new injuries requiring treatment in ED 48% reduction in hospital admissions for injury over 3 years 23% fewer drunk driving arrests
Literature Reviews Indicating Effectiveness of Screening and Brief Counseling Intervention Regarding Alcohol Solberg et al., Am J Prev Med, 2008 (adults in primary care) Tripodi et al., Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med, 2010 (adolescents ages 12-19) Jensen et al., J Consulting Clin Psychol, 2011 (adolescents) Larimer, Addict Behav, 2007 (college students) Carey et al., Addict Behav, 2007 (college students)
Young Adults at Risk for Excess Alcohol Consumption are Often Not Asked or Counseled About Drinking National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism 2/3 of 18-39 year olds nationwide saw a physician in the past year Only 14% of them: Were asked about their alcohol consumption and Given advice about what drinking patterns pose risk to health Persons 18-25: Were most likely to exceed low-risk drinking guidelines (68% vs. 56%) Helen Marie Witty Source: Hingson et al., J Gen Intern Med, 2011 Were least likely to have been asked about their drinking (34% vs. 54%), especially those under age 21 (26%) 8
Barriers to Screening National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Time to ask questions Time to respond to questions Lack of training Lack of treatment centers for referral Reimbursement issues
Insurers' Liability for Health/ Sickness Losses Due to Intoxication ("UPPL") as of January 1, 2010
Medicare will pay for annual alcohol screening and up to 4 brief face-to-face counseling interventions (American Medical News, Oct. 17, 2011)
Screening and Brief Alcohol Intervention at College Health Center Screened all students at health service for at-risk drinkers Past 2 weeks 5+ per occasion for men 4+ per occasion for women Excluded and referred for treatment BAC>0.35 Drank 200+ in past 30 days Source: Schaus et al., J. Stud. Alcohol Drug, Suppl. No. 16, 2009
Screening and Brief Alcohol Intervention (cont.) National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Interventions Based on 2 brief motivational interventions (MI) (20 minute sessions) Patient-Centered MI (Miller & Rollnick, 2002) NIAAA curriculum to reduce high risk drinking in college students (Fleming, 2002) Brief alcohol screening and intervention for college student BASICS (DiMeff, 1999) Results 3 months Reduction in typical and peak BAC Peak drinks/setting Drinks/week Foolish risk-taking 6 + 9 months Lower scores (Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index (RAPI)) Source: Schaus et al., J. Stud. Alcohol Drug, Suppl. No. 16, 2009
Fleming et al. Brief Physician Advice for Heavy Drinking College Students, Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 2010 Brief intervention studied at five college student health services Similar results as Schaus